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Concern over HIV cases among Australia鈥檚 international students

Resurgence of virus among vulnerable overseas students prompts calls for better awareness campaigns and pharmaceutical subsidies

Published on
January 9, 2024
Last updated
January 11, 2024
People look at a gaint condom over a heritage-listed obelisk at Hyde Park in Sydney to illustrate Concern over HIV cases among Australia鈥檚 international students
Source: Getty Images
Awareness-raising: a giant pink condom adorns an obelisk in Hyde Park, Sydney, in 2014, part of a campaign on HIV

A rising HIV caseload among Australia鈥檚 overseas students is undermining efforts to eliminate the disease while turning the international education dreams of hundreds of young foreigners into nightmares.

Health practitioners say universities need to boost awareness of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections as part of their duty of care to vulnerable students. They say subsidies for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), medications that reduce the chances of contracting HIV by up to 99 per cent, should also be extended to international students.

Australians can access PrEP for about A$30 (拢16) a month through the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, but foreigners pay up to five times as much if they import the pills 鈥 and around 30 times as much for over-the-counter supplies. Research suggests that international students鈥 concerns about the cost of PrEP, coupled with lack of awareness,聽are contributing to an uptick in infections.

Andrew Grulich, head of HIV epidemiology at the Kirby Institute at UNSW Sydney, said students featured prominently in a 鈥渞emaining epidemic鈥 of HIV concentrated in foreign-born gay and bisexual men. While infections among their Australian counterparts had fallen by about 70 per cent since 2014, he said, the international cohort had seen no such decline.

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Professor Grulich told an Australian Science Media Centre briefing that uptake of the preventative drugs was high among inner-city Australian gays but low in other communities. 鈥淰ery large numbers of foreign students in Australia, some of whom are men who have sex with men, cannot get access to subsidised PrEP,鈥 he said.

The problem was exacerbated by stigma against homosexuality in students鈥 home countries, he added. 鈥淚f people feel stigmatised, then they鈥檙e simply not going to seek out testing until they become very ill,鈥 Professor Grulich said.

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Australian HIV statistics generally do not distinguish international students from other migrants and visitors.聽聽show that the overseas-born proportion of the national HIV caseload has risen from less than 40 per cent a decade ago to around 50 per cent now.

In New South Wales, a magnet for international students,聽聽show that overseas-born people dominate cases. About two-thirds of new HIV diagnoses involve people from overseas, mostly East and South-east Asia. Many have been in the country for four years or less, and they tend to be diagnosed late. Infections among overseas-born people dipped during the coronavirus pandemic but are now rising again.

聽released聽before the pandemic found that 61 per cent of the gay and bisexual Asian men diagnosed in Sydney and Melbourne between 2014 and 2017 had been overseas students. Testing and preventative interventions for international students should be prioritised, the authors concluded.

Belinda Meggitt, team lead for UNSW Sydney鈥檚 health promotions unit, said international students鈥 sexual health was an overlooked area in higher education despite potentially 鈥減rofound鈥 ramifications. HIV and unplanned pregnancies were both more prevalent among international students than among their Australian peers, she said.

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鈥淎s universities, we have an opportunity to impact the lives of students in and out of class and to help them cultivate skills as global citizens. We also have a responsibility to keep them safe,鈥 she said.

鈥淚n more permissive cultures like Australia, sexual initiation is occurring at younger ages. International students are no longer under the protective gaze of their parents, so it鈥檚 no surprise that many find themselves in tricky situations.鈥

Many international students arrive in Australia with limited sexual health education, often from countries where medical care is provided mainly in pharmacies or hospitals. They struggle with confusing regulations around health services for foreigners 鈥 especially those who change their visa statuses after arriving in Australia.

Ms Meggitt said cultural and legal factors amplified their bewilderment. Students from countries that outlawed homosexuality or compelled premarital abstinence were particularly disadvantaged. 鈥淭hey really don鈥檛 have the same tools to keep themselves healthy when they鈥檙e negotiating sexual encounters,鈥 she said.

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She聽added that聽universities needed to emphasise that sexual health tests were readily available, fully covered by their health insurance, and 鈥減art of being an adult in Australia. Just like you have checks for other health issues, you do sexual health tests.鈥

Focusing such messages around 鈥渋dentifiers鈥 such as gay, queer or bisexual聽might suit locals but not international students, Ms Meggitt stressed. 鈥淚t just doesn鈥檛 appeal to people who might not see themselves as belonging to any of those groups.鈥

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Timing was also critical, she said. 鈥淲hen students first arrive, they鈥檙e not thinking so much about health or sex. Their focus is settling in, navigating their way around university and so on. The information needs to be available when they鈥檙e receptive to it. We tend to learn it when we need it.鈥

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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